At some point, everyone knew, Netflix's subscriber growth in the US had to slow down.
The company's video-streaming service is nearing market saturation among its core demographic -- affluent young-to-middle-aged people -- meaning further gains will be harder to come by. Still, it was a bit of a shock for investors to learn from Monday's earnings report that Netflix had added only 160,000 US subscribers in the second quarter -- a 0.3 per cent gain over the previous quarter.
International subscriptions grew by a more impressive 1.52 million, but that was below what the company had forecast as well. The earnings report was seen as a major stumble, and Netflix's stock is down about 14 per cent on the day as I write this.
Still, since we all knew this US slowdown was coming (to be followed several years down the road by similar slowdowns overseas), it seems like the really important question is how Netflix copes with it. Does the company have the ability to get more money out of each subscriber as subscriber growth slows? So far, it looks like the answer is yes -- albeit not a lot more money.
In 2013, Netflix began experimenting with tiered pricing that charged new US subscribers more for higher video quality and the ability to stream on multiple screens at the same time.
As it rolled that out, revenue per subscriber (average revenue per user, or ARPU, is the standard industry term) began a steady rise, as is apparent in the above chart.